|
| 1 | +--- |
| 2 | +layout: post |
| 3 | +title: "Pycon Pune 2017: A wonderful Python conference" |
| 4 | +date: "2017-03-14 18:18:02 +0530" |
| 5 | +tag: python conference |
| 6 | +--- |
| 7 | + |
| 8 | + |
| 10 | + |
| 11 | +## tl;dr |
| 12 | + |
| 13 | +The conference is worth attending if you are a student, programmer or a |
| 14 | +hobbyist. If you are a swag-hungry then don't expect much as a swag from this |
| 15 | +conference. If you are a Devsprint lover, then this conference has the coolest |
| 16 | +Devsprint. A great number of keynote speackers are invited for this conference. |
| 17 | + |
| 18 | + |
| 19 | +## Detailed Experience |
| 20 | + |
| 21 | +Because I was volunteering for this conference I reached Pune one day earlier |
| 22 | +than the conference days. The volunteer meeting was happening at Reserved-bit. |
| 23 | + |
| 24 | +### Volunteer |
| 25 | + |
| 26 | +#### Reserved-bit |
| 27 | + |
| 28 | +[Reserved-bit][reservedbit] is the best hackerspace I have ever come across. It |
| 29 | +has a large collection of programmable boards. You will find boards like |
| 30 | +[Raspberry Pi](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raspberry_Pi), [Bana |
| 31 | +Pi](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banana_Pi), |
| 32 | +[Dragonboard](https://developer.qualcomm.com/hardware/dragonboard-410c), |
| 33 | +[Bigalbon](https://www.bigalsmods.com/product-p/1001.htm), |
| 34 | +[BBC-microbit](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Micro_Bit) and the 3D printer. |
| 35 | +Furthermore, this space has a great collection of books on Compilers and |
| 36 | +Embedded programming. I managed to found few on open-source too. The owners are |
| 37 | +great hackers. You will love to interact with hacker [Siddhesh |
| 38 | +Poyarekar](https://siddhesh.in/). Hacker [Nisha |
| 39 | +Poyarekar](https://twitter.com/nisha_poyarekar) is volunteering the [PyLadies |
| 40 | +community](https://www.meetup.com/PyLadies-Pune/) at Pune. |
| 41 | + |
| 42 | + |
| 43 | +#### Pune to Mumbai |
| 44 | + |
| 45 | +I spent my half day in this space. I got the responsibility of receiving one of |
| 46 | +the keynote speakers who was landing at Mumbai airport midnight. To be frank, |
| 47 | +estimation of Google Maps between Pune to Mumbai is wrong. It showed nearly 2 |
| 48 | +hours but it took almost 4.5 hours to reach Mumbai. It took few more minutes to |
| 49 | +reach the airport. The road is impressively smooth. You will encounter the |
| 50 | +beautiful mountains of [Lonavla](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lonavla). The |
| 51 | +task of moving from Pune to Mumbai airport, receive Katie and come back to Pune |
| 52 | +was completed in almost 13 hours. I left from Pune around 4.30 PM and came back |
| 53 | +at nearly 5 AM next day early morning. |
| 54 | + |
| 55 | +#### Illness during conference |
| 56 | + |
| 57 | +Because I did a huge amount of traveling at that night, I was unable to get |
| 58 | +enough sleep. Such tiredness resulted in an eye infection. I managed to attend |
| 59 | +the first day of the conference, but I was not in a condition to attend the |
| 60 | +second day. Treatment from local doctor healed me in two days and then I was |
| 61 | +able to take part into Devsprint. |
| 62 | + |
| 63 | +### Conference |
| 64 | + |
| 65 | +The conference was a total of 4 days where the initial two days were for the |
| 66 | +talks and the end was assigned for a Devsprint. It didn't overwhelmed me with |
| 67 | +many tracks but gave the quality talks presented in a single track. The talks |
| 68 | +were set from 9 AM to 5 PM which was taken little lightly by the attendees. |
| 69 | + |
| 70 | +I was pretty impressed with the keynote speakers of this conference. |
| 71 | + |
| 72 | +#### [Katie Cunningham](https://twitter.com/kcunning) |
| 73 | + |
| 74 | +Katie is the O'Reilly author. Her |
| 75 | +[book](http://shop.oreilly.com/product/0636920024514.do) on Accessibility |
| 76 | +depicts her area of expertise. She is fun to talk to. She likes to listen about |
| 77 | +developer communities, writing and most importantly computer games. Her broad |
| 78 | +vision on product development is amazing. She is an avid reader. I enjoyed |
| 79 | +listening to her experience of being in India for the very first time. |
| 80 | + |
| 81 | +#### [Honza Kral](https://twitter.com/honzakral) |
| 82 | + |
| 83 | +Honza is the dude who loves contributing to |
| 84 | +[Django](https://www.djangoproject.com/). He is a core contributor of Django |
| 85 | +too. He hacks on Python drivers at [Elastic](https://www.elastic.co/). I was |
| 86 | +impressed with his suggestions on a code design problem I was trying to solve |
| 87 | +from the past few months. His suggestions on code design are worth noticing. He |
| 88 | +is a vimmer and maintains little [vim](http://vim.org) plugins as a part of his |
| 89 | +interest. |
| 90 | + |
| 91 | +#### [Stephen J. Turnbull](https://twitter.com/yasegumi) |
| 92 | + |
| 93 | +Stephen professes the Dismal Science of Economics. His knowledge is deep-rooted |
| 94 | +just like his beard. You will enjoy discussing computer science, books and |
| 95 | +his experience of programming. He is authoring few books written in the Japanese |
| 96 | +language. Stephen is [Emacsite](https://www.gnu.org/s/emacs/). |
| 97 | + |
| 98 | + |
| 100 | + |
| 101 | +#### [Terri Oda](https://twitter.com/terriko) |
| 102 | + |
| 103 | +Terri is a security nerd. She spent most of her time exploring tools at Intel. |
| 104 | +Terri knows how to hide from the spying of the U.S. Government. She is leading |
| 105 | +[Google Summer of Code](https://summerofcode.withgoogle.com/) section from |
| 106 | +[Python Software Foundation](https://www.python.org/psf/). Terri is PSF |
| 107 | +community service award winner. If you are a student and want to take part in |
| 108 | +GSoC choosing PSF as your organization then she is the right person to talk to. |
| 109 | + |
| 110 | +#### [Florian Fuchs](https://github.com/flofuchs) |
| 111 | + |
| 112 | +His knowledge on [ReST |
| 113 | +API](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Representational_state_transfer) construction |
| 114 | +is the best. He is a [Falcon](https://falconframework.org/) nerd too. I enjoyed |
| 115 | +discussing various authentication mechanisms for ReST API with him. He is a |
| 116 | +Redhatter. |
| 117 | + |
| 118 | + |
| 120 | + |
| 121 | +#### [Nick Coghlan](https://twitter.com/ncoghlan_dev) |
| 122 | + |
| 123 | +Nick listens more than he speaks. I will advise you to not disturb him if he is |
| 124 | +coding. He enjoys concentrating while coding. Getting his mentorship was a great |
| 125 | +experience. He has been contributing to [Core |
| 126 | +Python](https://github.com/python/cpython) for a few decades now. You will |
| 127 | +enjoy discussing on interesting code compositions with him. He is a Red Hatter. |
| 128 | + |
| 129 | +#### [Praveen Patil](https://twitter.com/_gnovi) |
| 130 | + |
| 131 | +Unfortunately, I didn't get much time to talk with Praveen during this |
| 132 | +conference. He is a math teacher who teaches concepts of mathematics using |
| 133 | +Python programming language. You should feel confident to speak with him on |
| 134 | +Python in education and mathematics with him. |
| 135 | + |
| 136 | + |
| 137 | +#### [John Hawley](https://github.com/warthog9) |
| 138 | + |
| 139 | +John is the wittiest person that I know. His lines always end with humor. He |
| 140 | +hacks mostly on hardware and GNU/Linux. Micro Python and GNU/Linux should be |
| 141 | +considered as part of his interests. |
| 142 | + |
| 143 | +I am sad to declare that I was unable to attend any keynote speeches because of |
| 144 | +the illness. Mostly I rested at the hotel or talked with people during the |
| 145 | +conference days. |
| 146 | + |
| 147 | + |
| 148 | + |
| 150 | + |
| 151 | + |
| 152 | +#### Volunteer Party |
| 153 | + |
| 154 | +If you are volunteering for this conference, then you will be invited to a |
| 155 | +volunteer dinner party. We enjoyed party colored disco lights dancing on the |
| 156 | +bits of the DJ. Punjabi food was served, and if you were above 25 than you were |
| 157 | +allowed to take a sip of a beer. |
| 158 | + |
| 159 | +#### Devsprint |
| 160 | + |
| 161 | +Devsprint happen at the [Redhat Headquarters, |
| 162 | +Pune](https://goo.gl/maps/mXeirzQhPFz). I found the building has tight security. |
| 163 | +You will find an individual pantry section dedicated to each department. We were |
| 164 | +instructed to hack at a huge cafeteria section. I myself contributed to Core |
| 165 | +Python. Nick Coghlan was mentoring for Core Python. I reviewed one PR, found one |
| 166 | +broken test case and wrote a fix of an existing issue with his help. Honza was |
| 167 | +leading the development of Django web framework. A team of [Anand |
| 168 | +Chitipothu](http://anandology.com/) mentored for [Web2py](www.web2py.com/). |
| 169 | +[Farhaan Bukhsh](https://twitter.com/fhackdroid) mentored for |
| 170 | +[Pagure](https://github.com/pypingou/pagure). John Hawley encouraged |
| 171 | +contributing to [MicroPython](https://micropython.org/). Terr Oda, Stephen |
| 172 | +Turnbull and Florian Fuchs mentored for |
| 173 | +[GNU/Mailman](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNU_Mailman). |
| 174 | + |
| 175 | + |
| 176 | + |
| 178 | + |
| 179 | +#### Why attend this conference? |
| 180 | + |
| 181 | +* This conference has the coolest Devsprint. The organizers understand the value |
| 182 | + of the Devsprint in a conference. I have never observed such an importance of |
| 183 | + Devsprint at any other Python conference happening in India. |
| 184 | + |
| 185 | +* If you are a student, then this is a beginner friendly conference. Don't be |
| 186 | + afraid to attend if you are a Python noob. You will receive a student |
| 187 | + concession for the tickets too. |
| 188 | + |
| 189 | +* If you are a developer, coming to this conference will inspire you to grow |
| 190 | + from your present level. You will meet core contributors, lead programmers, |
| 191 | + owners of startups and project managers. You will find a huge scope of |
| 192 | + opportunities to network with people. |
| 193 | + |
| 194 | +* The conference is single track event. This decision helped me to not miss the |
| 195 | + interesting talks. In my previous experience, parallel tracks forced me to |
| 196 | + choose between talks when I was interested in both, which killed me. |
| 197 | + |
| 198 | +* I have never seen such a huge amount of keynote speakers at any conference |
| 199 | + happening in India. Keynote speakers were the main attraction of this |
| 200 | + conference. |
| 201 | + |
| 202 | +#### What was missing? |
| 203 | + |
| 204 | +* If you are a swag-hungry fellow than attending this conference won't be worth |
| 205 | + it. The conference attendees have to be satisfied with the conference T-shirt. |
| 206 | + |
| 207 | +* I observed there were fewer corporate stalls than at other Python conferences. |
| 208 | + A stole from Reserved-bit, Redhat and PSF community stall was there. |
| 209 | + |
| 210 | +* A workshop section was completely missing. In my opinion, the workshop helps |
| 211 | + the beginners to start. There were a few topics which can be better |
| 212 | + represented as workshop rather than a talk. |
| 213 | + |
| 214 | +* I was unable to observe any dedicated section for an open space discussion. |
| 215 | + This section is helpful for communities and contributors to discuss |
| 216 | + interesting problems and think together. |
| 217 | + |
| 218 | +###### Proofreader: [Benaiah Mischenko][benaiah], [Chameleon][chameleon] |
| 219 | + |
| 220 | +[reservedbit]: https://reserved-bit.com |
| 221 | +[benaiah]: https://benaiah.me/ |
| 222 | +[chameleon]: https://chameleon.kingdomofmysteries.xyz/ |
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